Who

Diving into Oblivion

As it turned out, one weekend after opining about the viability of the
“current generation” consoles, the Xbox 360 finally appeared in reasonable
numbers. Suddenly they were everywhere. Coincidentally, I was getting tired of
low resolution Madden 06. Yes, my defenses are that thin.

There isn’t much to say about the console itself.

1. It’s not really any smaller or better looking than an Xbox.

2. It is a LOT louder.

3. Wireless controllers are the best thing ever.

4. Why is there only 13GB free on my disk?

5. XBox live Gold: Meh.

6. Madden 2006: Madden in high resolution. No real complaints, but I’m not
used to the new controls.

Basically, the 360 is like playing on a decent PC connected to a 50 inch
screen, with a nice gamepad, on my couch. Who would want more?

I also obtained Oblivion, because the shooters currently available on the
box that are not Halo don’t really seem worth it. Why is Half-Life 2 not
on this console?

I remember in my previous life when I tried to play Morrowind. I ran through
the first hour, made a character, walked out the door of the character making
place and was instantly bored to tears and quit the game forever.

Oblivion is a similar, but much denser experience. Here are my short
impressions:

1. The beginning of the game and the tutorial level are very well done.

2. It’s not hard to find things to do in the game. This makes it harder to
notice that you’ve forgotten what you wanted to do.

3. I don’t know what “radiant AI” is, but the NPCs in this game say the same
shit over and over again just like the NPCs in all the other games. They even
share their stock phrases with other people miles away. The difference is that
if you put them together in a room, they say the same shit to each other
until you talk to one of them to make them shut up. Not impressive.

4. The visuals are excellent, except for two issues. First, detail doesn’t
seem to gradually fall off with distance. Instead, the world is tremendously
detailed up to a certain threshold, at which time the detail falls off a cliff
and disappears. Second, the humanoid face models are awful. Everyone in this
land was apparently deformed in some horrible childhood accident.

I have not really made it far enough into the game to say anything more than
this. I don’t really have the combat system figured out, so anything scarier
than a mud crab still seems to kick my ass more often than not.

The open sandbox nature of the game works against it here. It’s not really
clear to me where I should go to obtain the things I need to obtain to not be
killed by crabs on the beach. This is made more complicated by the fact that
the leveling system is needlessly complicated. In order to give you the
impression that you are doing something “deep”, they cut up R into a dozen or
so components that all increase at varying rates. This makes you really think
about how you want to play the game before you’ve seen enough of the game to
figure out how you want to play the game. It seems like it would be easier to
level everything at once for a while and then let me pick later, or not at
all.

Last night, in search of more power, and figuring that it should be the hub of
everything, I went to the Imperial City. I walked around the walls for about
an hour. It was majestic and pretty. I talked to the zombie people there who
said the same things over and over again. No one gave me any idea what I
should be doing or where I could go. It turns out what I really wanted to do
was to go to some small town out in the middle of nowhere where the guild
halls are and I can pick up some more power items.

I guess I’ll go try that tonight.

Anyway, I went back and crawled around in a cave for a while, only to be
repeatedly killed by a female magic user who had more spells than me. What I
really wanted at this point was a nice sniper rifle. The game has a lot of
darkness to hide in, but it’s hard to actually sneak up close to people and
hit them. A nice rifle would fix this problem.

From Pete’s descriptions of
Morrowind, it really does
sound to me like Oblivion is more of the same, but better tuned and with
higher resolution textures. The tuning and overall craftsmanship make a big
difference. They certainly got me to play for more than an hour this time.
We’ll see if the game can keep me on the hook.